精确还是非精确概率?来自与晚年痴呆症相关的调查回答的证据

Precise or Imprecise Probabilities? Evidence from Survey Response Related to Late-Onset Dementia

Journal of the European Economic Association · 2021
被引 31
人大 AABS 4

中文导读

基于美国健康与退休研究数据,首次实证分析无痴呆老年人对痴呆风险的认知,发现近半数受访者持有非精确概率,且精确概率者中近三分之一会四舍五入,这对保险需求建模有重要警示。

Abstract

Abstract We elicit numerical expectations for late-onset dementia and long-term-care (LTC) outcomes in the US Health and Retirement Study. We provide the first empirical evidence on dementia-risk perceptions among dementia-free older Americans and establish important patterns regarding imprecision of subjective probabilities. Our elicitation distinguishes between precise and imprecise probabilities, while accounting for rounding of reports. Imprecise-probability respondents quantify imprecision using probability intervals. Nearly half of respondents hold imprecise dementia and LTC probabilities, while almost a third of precise-probability respondents round their reports. These proportions decrease substantially when LTC expectations are conditioned on hypothetical knowledge of the dementia state. Among rounding and imprecise-probability respondents, our elicitation yields two measures: an initial rounded or approximated response and a post-probe response, which we interpret as the respondent's true point or interval probability. We study the mapping between the two measures and find that respondents initially tend to over-report small probabilities and under-report large probabilities. Using a specific framework for study of LTC insurance choice with uncertain dementia state, we illustrate the dangers of ignoring imprecise or rounded probabilities for modeling and prediction of insurance demand.

主观概率精确概率老年痴呆症风险长期护理保险